How Writing is Like House Hunting: My wish list includes open concept, stainless steel appliances, granite countertops…

My wish list includes open concept, stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, undercounter sink, glass tile backsplash, walk-in pantry, real hardwood floors.  I want four bedrooms, three-and a half baths, en suite master bedroom with two walk-in closets. Three-car garage, walk-out finished basement for a man-cave and media room.  Large deck for BBQs on an acre of fenced land.  All for $150,000. We’re 23-years-old and have been working for a year and deserve to have everything we want….”
I admit it.  I watch too much HGTV, especially a crazy little show called “House Hunters.”  I don’t know what it is, but I am fascinated the expectations people have when shopping for their dream house…and what they believe is possible on a limited budget.  What it reminds me of, I suppose, is myself and my original expectations about writing and having a writing career.  How much easier I thought it would be.
On “House Hunters,” the real estate agents do a lot of whispering to the camera about how their clients need to face reality and adjust their expectations. They have a lot to learn about leaky plumbing, lurid paint colors, and the freeway view from the back deck.  Deciding to write includes similar wake-up calls.  Sure, when we see books from the James Patterson Factory on the best seller list week after week, we think, “I can do this.  I write better than that.  These stories are trite.”  And “That’s where I want to be, selling book after book, and raking in the dough.”  But, writing, even not so good writing, has its challenges, its requirements, its reality.We are all naïve to a certain point when we begin a new adventure, whether it’s searching for a new place to live or deciding we want to be a writer.  What we see in the distance is our “dream house” or our “dream career,” and we think—hope—it’s as easy as it looks.
Instead of leaky plumbing, we writers discover we have leaky brains.  What we thought was a great idea while it was bouncing around in our head, drips out on the computer screen one annoying drop at a time. Those childhood memories that felt complete and poignant when we were mowing the lawn and smelling the freshly-cut grass evaporate when your fingers are on the computer keys.  And then there are all the REAL LIFE interruptions rumbling day and night all around you.
But does this mean you can’t write, can’t have a career, can’t learn and grow and gain great satisfaction from putting words on paper?  As anyone will tell you who has looked for the ideal apartment, lusted for a dream house, it takes time, patience, and compromise.  You may not get the exact home you dreamed about, but through your daily presence in a house, becoming acquainted with its quirks,  practicing your handy-man skills, learning about what works and what doesn’t work, talking with experts,  remodeling, finessing, you can turn a house into what you want, you can make it yours.  The same is true of writing.
It’s important to have dreams and desire about what we want to achieve as writers.  It is important to strive and grow.  We transform ourselves as we write because that’s what writing does to us, for us.  It allows us to observe life, ponder its circumstances and its realities, and communicate our understanding to others.  This, like creating a home, takes time and patience.  We make mistakes, we adjust, we learn, we ask questions, we grow.  And maybe, just maybe, our dreams will come true.

Also published at Flash Fiction Chronicles on May 21  2012.

Glass Woman Prize Winners Announced

THE GLASS WOMAN PRIZE
*** Winners of the Eleventh Glass Woman Prize ***

Two runner up prizes (with an award of US$ 50 each) go to “Peeling Onions” by Jenny Gumpertz and “Herstory” by Gessy Alvarez. Congratulations on two fantastic stories, Jenny Gumpertz and Gessy Alvarez.

Finalists were Michelle Elvy’s story “X,” Heather Fowler’s story “If I Kiss That Girl,” Deborah Jiang Shein’s story “Devoured,” MaryAnne Kolton’s story “A Perfect Family House,” Kirsty Logan’s story “Tiger Palace,” Laura Loomis’s story “Meeting Angel,” Natalie McNabb’s story “Catching Maggie,” Larissa Shmailo’s story “Madwoman,” Marci Stillerman’s story “Wigs by Monte,” and Dallas Woodburn’s story “Guitar Lessons.” So much excellent writing. Congratulations.

A huge thank you to the author’s who gave permission to post or link to their stories.

What’s Up at Every Day Fiction this Month

January’s Table of Contents
Jan 1 David Bright HTML
Jan 2 William Doonan Visions of Sugarplums: One Elf’s Descent Into Madness
Jan 3 Tony Burnett Big Sweet Life
Jan 4 Milo James Fowler Stone in the Sky and Bread Below
Jan 5 Elaine Olund A Winter Break
Jan 6 Scott W Younkin Heed the Sailor’s Tale
Jan 7 Dan Allen Knock-Knock
Jan 8 Lydia S Gray In Return
Jan 9 JC Piech Imaginary Cowboys
Jan 10 Christopher Owen Deepsleep
Jan 11 Joanna Bressler The Shadow Woman
Jan 12 April Grey Doing Time
Jan 13 Richard Ferri Making Do
Jan 14 Cezarija Abartis The Golden Rule
Jan 15 Allison Nast Dear Baby
Jan 16 Wayne Scheer Late Night Heroics
Jan 17 Dan Purdue Just Jeff
Jan 18 Gustavo Bondoni Christopher’s Retreat
Jan 19 Laura Crowe Glass Ceiling
Jan 20 Ted Lietz The Truth about Truth
Jan 21 A. E. Decker The Quest
Jan 22 Michelle Ann King There You Are, My Love
Jan 23 Jonathan Pinnock Rôle-Play
Jan 24 Ben Carey The Smell Of Things To Come
Jan 25 Gerald Warfield Stonehenge in His Garden
Jan 26 Thomas Ecclestone Grunt The Underling
Jan 27 Michael A Rose Candy Sales Are Through the Roof
Jan 28 Jason Michelsen Circus
Jan 29 Andy Leigh de Fonseca Survival
Jan 30 Andrew Waters Flame
Jan 31 Joyce Chng Birth Story

EDP To Launch Every Day Novels


This is exciting news.  Every Day Publishing, the “power” behind Every Day Fiction and Every Day Poets has come up with a terrific new concept: Every Day Novels and they’ve recently announced that the Every Day Novel website for their first Every Day NovelLifting Up Veronica by K.C. Ball, is now live.

Lifting Up Veronica follows Michael Kovac, a sociologist from Ohio State University, as he travels to rural West Virginia in the summer of 1960 to shoot footage for a documentary during a week-long tent meeting at a Signs Followers church — a Christian sect best known for their practice of handling venomous snakes and participating in other potentially deadly practices…

Many of you already know K. C. for her many stories published at Every Day Fiction or from 10Flash, the genre flash site she found ed a couple of years ago. She has also written articles for Flash Fiction Chronicles and poems for Every Day Poets.  K.C. Ball lives in Seattle, Washington. She became an addict of the written word as a child in Ohio and began writing fiction full-time four years ago. Her short fiction has appeared in print and online; she has won the Writers of the Future award and graduated from Clarion West. Lifting Up Veronica is her first novel.

EDP has a launch promotion up right now (20% off the subscription price) but that won’t last long, so anyone who wants to benefit from that shouldn’t wait. More information about the Every Day Novels concept can be found here: http://everydaynovels.com/about/


Link to to Lifting Up Veronica:

"Wounded Moon"

Just read a review of Tim Johnston’s Short Story America Anthology–a very nice one BTW–and was thrilled to see the main character of my story “Wounded Moon” mentioned!  So thrilling to me so I had to share.

“Days laters, I’m still thinking about Mason, the shattered survivor in “Wounded Moon,” by Gay Degani. And Elaine, the disoriented middle-aged mother who sees her former self in her son’s rebellious girlfriend (“This Is Not My Beautiful Life,” by Ted McLoof). I’m haunted by the old woman, Irene, slowly slipping down the dark hallway of Alzheimer’s – where the same memory keeps changing shape (“Disengaged” by Jen Knox) – and the old man, Fergus, whose spite-filled fantasies keep him alive (“Fergus” by Laury A. Egan).”

–Margaret Evans, editor of the Low Country Weekly

Here’s the link:  A Comeback Story 

Semper Fidelis: Always Faithful

During WWII, my parents were Marines. My father was a Lieutenant who served as a pilot instructor, my mother was a sergeant in the motor pool at El Toro in California.  They met on my mother’s 21st birthday in a bar in Laguna Beach.  He was from Iowa, she from Louisiana. They fell in love and when my father shipped out to the Pacific, they got married.   They survived the war and moved close to my mother’s hometown so my dad could get his Masters’ degree in Economics at Tulane. They lived in Iowa too before moving to California in the mid-50’s.They had two daughters and remained together until my father’s death in 1983.

On this day of remembrance and thanksgiving, I honor my parents and all veterans who have served our country. Let those of us who are kept safe because of the sacrifice of others, continue to strive to be better people so we can have a stronger, more humane and ethical country. Let’s put greed behind us, selfishness too, honor achievement and hard work, and move toward something good.  Let us talk and plan without thought of what we personally benefit, but rather how everyone can benefit. Then perhaps when those men and women who die for us will not die in vain.

Semper Fidelis: Always Faithful

EDF’s October Calendar

I’m running a little behind this month, but here’s theCalendar for October at Every Day Fiction.

October’s Table of Contents

10/1
Nicole Dunaway
Choices
10/2
M. Howalt
Focal Point
10/3
Len Hazell
Odin and Mr. Whitstuble
10/4
Sam Pelelo-Ray
Club
10/5
John Eric Vona
There Are Those Who Have the Stars…
10/6
Wayne Scheer
Just Drinks with Friends
10/7
Kaolin Imago Fire
Minimum Wage Fantasy
10/8
Sean Gibbons
Lights Like Stars
10/9
Barbara Mountjoy
Personally
10/10
Shamus Maxwell
Mank the Over-Sensitive
10/11
Shawna Mayer
Next
10/12
Erlynda Jacqui Chan
To Fly
10/13
Christopher Owen
Annie’s Book
10/14
Andrew Waters
Dancer’s Choice
10/15
Johann Thorsson
Seasons of Change
10/16
JC Piech
That Woman
10/17
Paul A. Freeman
Gifted
10/18
Sylvia Hiven
Dali Girl
10/19
Ryan Harvey
Foolish Mortals
10/20
Wanda Wande
Origami
10/21
Mark English
Giant Leap
10/22
Paula Cappa
The Nature of Sisters
10/23
James C.G. Shirk
All I Ever Was
10/24
Peter Tupper
Worn-Out Monsters
10/25
Aaron Polson
The Long Walk to Never
10/26
Brandon Nolta
All Those Things We Never Find
10/27
Oonah V Joslin
Hidden Communication
10/28
J. Chris Lawrence
The Widow’s Tale
10/29
Hector McCrillis
Scarecrow Sam
10/30
Lindsay Morgan Lockhart
Count to a Thousand
10/31
Gretchen Bassier
Lady Gaga’s Revenge

Pomegranate Stories is now available as an eBook at Amazon.com for only 99 cents.  If you prefer, the paperback edition is also available for $9.99. This is a chapbook of eight stories constructed around the relationships between mothers and daughters.


From Annie Clarkson’s review of Pomegranate for the short review:

Pomegranate Stories is a brief glimpse into Gay Degani’s short fiction, and I want to read more. Her writing in this collection is visceral, has punch and explores the lives of characters that are not experiencing the easiest lives or relationships. There is some beautiful imagery and description and a very insightful approach to dialogue. 

Here are some comments posted about the paperback edition of Pomegranate Stories at Amazon:

…by the end you wish there were twenty more stories to read. The stories are inspiring, thought provoking, emotional, and a pleasure to read. –John Towler

Gay Degani has a stunning voice, gripping and charged, and loaded with such authentic realism, that her literary stories borderline nonfiction horrors.  –Erin Cole

Gay is a wonder at laying bare a fictional life and reminding you so much of your heart is in that character. She is a master at cutting to the quick of emotions and then layering them with humanity.  –Kevin Shamel

The stories in ‘Pomegranate’ convince you Gay Degani’s been in your shoes, thought your thoughts, felt your emotions. You realize that you are stronger than you thought you were, the ironies of life won’t stop the rain from falling, and that we need to smile when the opportunities present themselves. Beautiful prose, beautiful stories, do yourself a favor and buy this book. –Jodi MacArthur

Alongside the growing number of short story collections published recently–some of them doing surprisingly well–comes this delicious little “sleeper” volume by Gay Degani, titled “Pomegranate Stories.” 

There are only eight stories, and a few of those are short enough to qualify as Flash Fiction, but the content is so startling, so intense and provocative, so well written, that it feels like a much weightier volume. The stories are about mothers and daughters (and the men in their lives), but don’t think `sentimental sweetness,’ think `raw reality.’  –Jackie Houchin